Cinnamon significantly
decreased the blood sugar in people who had type II diabetes and ate
a 1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon a day. This powerful bark decreases
cholesterol, keeps your teeth and gums healthy, improves digestion
and alleviates the congestion that comes from colds and allergies.
It is also anti-inflammatory and improves blood circulation. All
that and it tastes good.

Turmeric is perhaps a less well-known spice, unless you love
Indian food and curry. This spice is bright orange and comes from
the root of a plant in the ginger family. It is a powerful
antioxidant (just as strong as vitamins C and E) and works as an
anti-inflammatory agent. In fact, it can be drunk in the form of
golden milk to reduce inflammation and joint pain, or put on a
swollen area as a poultice. People with liver problems or hepatitis
also drink turmeric or take turmeric capsules because this spice
increases the production of bile in the liver and protects it from
toxins.

Basil is not only delicious on pizza or ground up in pesto,
but also boosts the cardiovascular system. People who have colds or
asthma drink basil tea to make breathing easier and to invigorate
the lungs. Basil also has a calming effect on the nerves, relieves
headaches, brings down fevers, and promotes healing from insect
bites and skin infections.

Oregano has always been known to help relieve bad breath. It
is also great against swollen throats, coughing, insomnia and
headaches. This herb is also a powerful antioxidant. Oregano has “42
times more antioxidants than apples, 30 times more than potatoes, 12
times more than oranges, and four times more than blueberries.”

Not often the we find so many good tasting things that are actually
good for us.

German chocolate cake is
actually named for Sam German, the American who invented a dark
baking chocolate when he worked for the American Baker's Chocolate
Company in 1852.

However, Germany has been instrumental in the advancement of many
desserts, with contributions that include lebkuchen or spicy
gingerbread, apple strudel, stollen, which is similar to fruitcake,
and of course, the Berliner, which we call the jelly doughnut.
Christmas has many more German specialties, not the least of which
are rum ball cookies.

Back in June 1976 this tower solved
a few problems for the people of Toronto, Canada. They had been
having problems with their TV and radio reception. Interference from
the many skyscrapers in the city were causing TV shows to be
superimposed on top of each other.

To remedy the situation, the Canadian National Railway Company was
commissioned to build an antenna that would tower over every
building ever built. The antenna design turned into a tourist
attraction design by John Andrews Architects and Webb Zerafa Menkes
Housden Architects.

63 million dollars and 1,537 people were needed to complete the
tallest free standing structure and building in the world (until
2007). The CN (Canadian National) Tower, including the 335 foot,
steel broadcasting antenna, is 1,815 feet, 5 inches tall. At 1,465
feet, you can stand on the public observation Space Deck.

You can take one of six elevators to the Sky Pod level at a speed of
15 miles per hour, or you could climb the 1769 steps up the tower.
There is also dining in the world’s highest and largest revolving
restaurant, aptly named "360". I have been up there and the views
are magnificent.

Sixteen Toronto TV and FM radio stations broadcast their signals
from the antenna and all over Southern Ontario, Canada.

The name refers to an Oklahoma
resident and also the OU football team. Many settlers entered
Oklahoma before the legal time for settlement in April 1889, thereby
beating out law-abiding folks who followed the rules and moved in on
time. Sooner came to mean both an Oklahoman and anyone who begins
too soon.

In the Bible, when Moses went to
Egypt, his brother Aaron stayed behind in their birth town in
Egypt's far east. When Moses asked the King of Egypt to set his
people free, it was Aaron who sold the idea to their kinsfolk.

Aaron became a high priest. His ceremonial breastplate held four
rows of three stones each. Exodus 28:17-20 states, "There were
twelve stones, one for each of the names of the sons of Israel, each
engraved like a seal with the name of one of the twelve tribes."
These 12 stones also symbolized the 12 months of the year and the 12
signs of the zodiac.

The gems have changed a few times and different countries use
different stones. Below is the US version for 2012.

It was in 15th-century Poland that wearing these birthstones gained
popularity. In contrast to today's custom of wearing your birthstone
throughout the year, the early proponents owned a full set of 12 and
wore each month's stone, regardless of birthday. The Gemological
Institute of America says the custom began in Germany in the 1560s.

July 1, 2012 Amazon will be
collecting Texas state tax on items purchased online. If you live in
Texas and are thinking of buying something soon, buy it before July
1 to save a few dollars on taxes. BTW, while you are there this
might be the time to pick up a few of my books.

The Sea Shepherds landed a helicopter on an Antarctic iceberg, dug
up some ice, melted it in Tasmania, and flew it to Perth for
brewing. Only 30 bottles were made, and the first bottle sold for
$800 at auction.

Another extremely expensive beer is made by Pabst. Hard to imagine,
but at $44 per bottle, Chinese Pabst Blue Ribbon costs about 40
times more than what’s sold in the US.

PBR 1844 is made from German caramel malts, is aged in uncharred
American whiskey barrels, and comes in a fancy glass bottle. Master
brewer Alan Kornhauser designed the ale to compete with higher end
wines and brandies. It is not sold outside of China.

This drink found in many Chinese
restaurants in the San Francisco Bay Area, dates back to the Gold
Rush of 1849. According to the story, gold prospectors and sailors
would frequent San Francisco’s bar scene in search of a good time.

The sailors treated the bar girls to what they thought was French
champagne, but which was actually Belfast Sparkling Cider, a lightly
sweetened drink introduced to the region by Irish refugees who
immigrated to the US during the potato famine.

Ship captains apparently paid the bar girls to play along and
watched their sailors become intoxicated to the point that it wasn’t
a struggle to get them back to sea.

According to the San Jose Mercury News, it can be found in almost
every large Chinese restaurant in San Francisco and to retailers
throughout Chinatown. Belfast is especially popular in the month of
the Chinese New Year.

Most cameras have this strange symbol
imprinted somewhere on the case. If you read the camera's manual,
you know what it is but if you didn't, that circle with a line drawn
through it marks exactly where the sensor of the camera is located.

It is called the 'film plane mark' and is helpful for people who
take macro shots. Knowing exactly where the sensor plane (or film
plane or focal plane) is inside the camera's body let's
photographers know the exact distance between their subject and the
film plane.

Jun 22, 2012

To make mistakes is human; to stumble is commonplace; to be able to
laugh at yourself is maturity.
I have made mistakes and stumbled along the way, but today I am
laughing, because it is a Happy Friday!

Firestone tires was bought
out in 1988 by Bridgestone, a Japanese rubber conglomerate based in
Tokyo.

Dialsoap was bought in 2004 by by Henkel KGaA, of
Germany.

Shell Oil Company is the US-based affiliate of Royal Dutch
Shell from Netherlands.

Church's Chicken was sold in 2004 Arcapita of Bahrain (it
removed bacon from its menu due to Sharia law).

Holiday Inn is now owned by British InterContinental Hotels
Group PLC.

The Chrysler building in New York is now owned by the Abu
Dhabi Investment Council.

Budweiser is now owned by Belgian company InBev.

Also, GM, Walmart, Symantec, Kodak (what's left of it), and
McDonald's now get the majority of sales outside of the US.In
fact, 53.6% of total sales from all the S&P companies were
made outside of the US.

This men’s underwear maker was
originally founded by a group of New Yorkers named Bradley,
Voorhees, and Day to make women’s bustles. Eventually the trio
branched out into knitted union suits for men, and their wares
became so popular that “BVDs” has become a generic term for any
underwear.

Someone who is pompous and conceited is called
a ‘stuffed shirt’. Their description goes back to American women’s
fashion in the early 1900’s. At that time, women wore ‘shirtwaists’.
These were dresses or blouses tailored like shirts.

As dummies were not yet in existence, stores displayed the garments
in their show windows stuffed with tissue paper. They may have
looked good from afar, but on closer inspection they proved to be
flimsy, without substance.

Among other definitions, a “spud”
is a “sharp, narrow spade” used to dig up large rooted plants.
Around the mid-19th century (first documented reference in 1845 in
New Zealand), this implement began lending its name to the things it
was often used to dig up, potatoes. This caught on throughout the
English speaking world and this slang term for a potato is still
common today.

The word “potato” comes from the Haitian word “batata”, which was
their name for a sweet potato. Potatoes were grown about 2000 years
ago in South America. This later came to Spanish as “patata” and
eventually into English as “potato”. Potatoes were first introduced
to Europe through the Spanish.

Exactly who introduced French fries to the world isn’t entirely
known. Among the various theories, historical accounts indicate that
the Belgians were possibly frying up thin strips of potatoes during
the late 17th century. It was very common for the people to fry up
small fish as a staple for their meals. However, when the rivers
froze up thick enough, it was difficult to get fish. Instead of
frying up fish in these times, they would cut up potatoes in long
thin slices, and fry them up as they did the fish. Today, the
Belgians still eat more French fries or Frites than any country in
Europe.

The French originally thought potatoes caused various diseases. In
fact, in 1748, the French Parliament even banned cultivation of
potatoes as they were convinced potatoes caused leprosy. However,
while in prison in Prussia, Antoine-Augustine Parmentier was forced
to cultivate and eat potatoes and found the French notions about the
potato weren’t true.

The French appeared to be the ones that spread fries to America and
Britain and it, in turn, was the Americans, through fast food
chains, that eventually popularly introduced them to the rest of the
non-European world as 'French fries'. Because of this spread by
American fast food chains, in many parts of the non-European world,
'French fries' are more often than not known as 'American fries'.

Jun 19, 2012

Two of the group are brothers, but their
name is DeWitt. The other two are not brothers. Don and Harold Reid,
along with Phil Balsley and Lew DeWitt make up the group called the
Statler Brothers.

Originally, they called themselves the Kingsmen, until the song
"Louie, Louie" by another group called The Kingsmen hit the charts.
They decided to call themselves The Statler Brothers, borrowed from a
brand of tissue paper.

Lew DeWitt wrote "Flowers On The Wall" one of their biggest hits. LINK

The federal government wants to implement a
centralized system of control over all communications, with last
year’s announcement that all new cell phones will be required to
comply with the PLAN program (Personal Localized Alerting Network),
which will broadcast emergency alert messages directly to all Americans’
cell phones.

Although users can opt out of receiving the alerts from FEMA and the
Amber Alert program, messages direct from the president will be
mandatory.

The thought of cellphone users being forcibly targeted with text
messages from Barack Obama during the election season has obviously
stoked concerns that the emergency alert system could be exploited
for political reasons.

The system went live in the New York and Washington Metro
areas last December 2011, caused panic in New Jersey after Verizon
customers received text messages warning them that a “civil
emergency” was in progress and to take shelter. This prompted alarmed
citizens to flood 911 lines with anxious calls.

Verizon Wireless later apologized to its customers for causing
alarm, admitting that the confusion was caused by a “test” of the
PLAN emergency alert system.

The emergency alerts are designed to be incorporated into
the Intellistreets system which turns all street lights into
surveillance hubs that can record conversations and broadcast
messages.

For the first time ever the government will have a direct line to
millions of Americans who use cell phones and be able to transmit whatever messages it decides. Between this and the GPS required on all cell phones, we no longer need worry about being alone.

Do you know why some candy makers color
their concoctions? Cherry, strawberry, raspberry and watermelon all
lend themselves to the color red, and if any two of those flavors
were in the same pack, they had to be distinguishable by color.

At first, the problem was solved by making cherry and strawberry
slightly different shades of red. Watermelon pops were often made a
lighter pink-red, and raspberry ones a dark wine-red. Scientists
soon found out, though, that the most inexpensive and widely
available dye for this deep red, Amaranth, or Red No. 2, provoked
severe reactions, and was deemed a possible carcinogen and banned by
the FDA.

The ice pop folks had access to blue dye, but no flavors that needed
it. It was just an extra color sitting around, so they started to
marry the flavor of blue raspberry, with the bright blue synthetic
food coloring Brilliant Blue, or Blue No. 1).

Blue raspberry flavor is a now common flavoring for candy, snack
foods, sweet syrups and soft drinks. It is more often used in the
United States and originates from Rubus leucodermis, or Blue
Raspberry for the blue-black color of its fruit. This species is
also related to the black raspberry. Of course, all of this has
nothing to do with giving someone the raspberries, which term, by
the way, is used over much of the globe or a Bronx cheer as many
in the US call it.

Here is an interesting set of pictures of
mockups, practice drills, lifelike works of art, simulators,
puppets, robots, models, prototypes, automatons, and more. All for
your viewing pleasure.
LINKI especially like the robot built to pull a rickshaw.

Jun 12, 2012

This word takes its name from a
soft drink, rather than the other way. The word is not used as much
these days. It means 'the ability to face difficulty with spirit and
courage'.

The soft drink was invented by Dr. Augustin Thompson, a Maine native
and Civil War veteran who worked in Lowell, MA. He patented a
nostrum called Moxie Nerve Food in 1876. He eventually reformulated
his drink and shortened the name to Moxie, in 1884.

An aggressive marketing campaign helped the brand grow into one of
the first mass-produced soft drinks in the United States. One early
advertisement for the drink read, “It nourishes the nervous system,
cools the blood, tones up the stomach, and causes healthful, restful
sleep. The family who orders a case from their grocer feels better
and happier; the man who buys it in town at the druggists by the
glass can accomplish more work.”

Maine declared Moxie its state soft drink in 2005 and the beverage
is celebrated with a festival in Lisbon Falls, ME, every year.

June 6 marked the beginning of the new
internet. The good news it that it happened with little fanfare and
almost no one noticed.

The old Internet is almost out of room. The new Internet is vastly
bigger. It's ready for trillions and trillions more computers,
devices, web sites, etc.

In order to be on the Internet, a device or Web site needs an
address. The old Internet had about 4.3 billion IP (Internet
protocol) addresses. The original inventors never thought they would
run out of numbers, but today, there are more mobile phones in use
than that. The new Internet allows for about 40 trillion trillion
trillion (or, 340,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000)
addresses.

This new Internet is known as Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) and
the old Internet is IPv4. (IPv5 was scrapped).

Here's an example of what an old Internet address looked like:
192.0.2.1. Here is an example of a new IPv6 address: 2001:0db8:
85a3:0000:0000: 8a2e:0370:7334.

Network engineers have been working on this for years and you
shouldn't notice anything different as they completely switch
everything from the old Internet to the new Internet, which will
take a couple of years.

If you are going to sign up for a new ISP (service provider) or buy
a new home router or launch a new Web-based business, make sure it
works with IPv6. Even though the new Internet is totally turned on,
not every network provider has become IPv6 compliant. Many
businesses have been spending millions of dollars and years to
upgrade their networks.

Over time, the new Internet will have all kinds of devices (things
we can't even imagine) connected to the Internet, like every
appliance in your home, medical sensors, and much more.

Here is one that needs to be on your
shelf next to the bacon vodka. The trend of strange vodka flavors
continues with Glazed Donut Vodka. Created by a company that has other sweet-flavored vodkas. Other 360 flavors
include double chocolate, Bing cherry, and cola — it beats the
real thing by over 150 calories.

The earliest reference to some aspect of
this expression goes all the way back to the Ancient Egyptians. They
noted that the heliacal rising of the star Sirius heralded the
hottest part of the summer. The star’s hieroglyph is a dog. Sirius
would appear in Egypt just before the season where the Nile
typically floods. So it is thought the star’s hieroglyphic symbol
being a dog symbolized a “watchdog”.

It is the brightest star in what is now known as the Canis Major
(Latin for Greater Dog) constellation. It’s rising marked the start
of the hottest part of the year, which then became the 'Dog Days'.

The Roman’s and Greeks had expressions for Dog Days. They both
believed that, when Sirius rose around the same time as the Sun,
this contributed to that time of year becoming hotter. As such, they
would often make sacrifices to Sirius, including sacrificing dogs,
to appease Sirius with the hope that this would result in a mild
summer and would protect their crops from scorching. Seems to me
that offering dead dogs to a dog might not please him as much as
they thought.

This month's issue of
Popular Science will be the first monthly U.S. consumer magazine to
bring an editorial feature to life by way of a new augmented reality
technology from Aurasma that unites the physical and virtual worlds
to deliver a unique and interactive experience for readers. You can
hold your phone up to the printed page and it will show a video of
someone talking about the article to provide more background info.
Here is a LINK
that shows how it works. Another great example of where art meets
science.

Long before there was Daimler Benz
and Mercedes, there were two car companies. At the same time that
Karl Benz was developing his three-wheeler in Mannheim, Germany, in
the 1880s, Gottlieb Daimler was creating the world's first
four-wheeled automobile with an internal combustion engine in
Stuttgart, 75 miles away.

Incidentally, Benz' wife, Bertha used her dowry to pay off his debts
and keep him in business. She also undertook the world’s first
long-distance car journey, and is acknowledged as the first lady
motorist in history.

Daimler received his patent for a "vehicle with gas or petroleum
drive machine" in 1885. Benz built three gas engine models between
1885 and 1887, and received the patent for his design in 1886.

In the United States at the time, cars powered by steam, gasoline,
and electricity were all proliferating on the roadways.

In April 1900, Emil Jellinek, an Austrian businessman made an
agreement with DMG (Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft, or Daimler Motor
Company) to buy and resell its cars. He decided to use his young
daughter's name, Mercedes, as a product name. Jellinek ordered 36
vehicles at a total price of 550,000 marks, equivalent to over 2
million dollars today. A few weeks later, he placed a new order for
another 36 vehicles.

This first ‘Mercedes’ was developed by Wilhelm Maybach, the chief
engineer at DMG, and it is regarded today as the first modern
automobile.

After various iterations, in November 1921, DMG applied for patents
for a three-dimensional three-pointed star enclosed in a circle and
it became a registered trademark in August 1923. Daimler and Benz
merged in 1926. Now you know how all the names and pieces fit
together.

When you are reading a long page and just
looking for a name, you can hold down the CTRL key and hit the
letter F. A box will open on the bottom of the screen and you can
begin typing the word. It will find and highlight that word on the
page. This also works in Microsoft Word documents. If the word is
not found, the box will turn pink to let you the word is not on the
page.

Amelia Jenks Bloomer was born in
1818. She was a women’s rights advocate, social reformer and
temperance advocate. She married Dexter Bloomer, who encouraged her
to write for his newspaper. Later she wrote for her own periodical
about women's rights.

Among other things, she worked for more sensible dress for women and
recommended what was called the Bloomer Costume in 1849. Bloomer
believed that “pantalettes” were appropriate clothing for women.
These were baggy pants that narrowed at the ankles and were meant to
be worn under dresses. Bloomer advocated them because they both
preserved a woman’s decency and allowed her to participate in more
activities without having to worry about indecency. That is why
bloomer panties were named after her. Elizabeth Smith Miller
introduced the costume, but it was Amelia that gave bloomers the
name we still use today.

Later she established churches, helped pass suffrage legislation,
and she even founded the Soldier’s Age Society. In 1871, she became
the president of the Iowa Women Suffrage Society and helped pass a
law that put an end to the distinction between male and female
property rights. She petitioned congress to either end her taxation
or end the “political disabilities” that did not allow her an active
role in the government.

Jun 5, 2012

Here is an easy way to remember what to put in
boiling water vs. room temperature water. Whatever grows below
ground, like potatoes, should be placed in room-temperature water
and brought to a boil. Whatever is grown above ground, like Brussels
sprouts, should be placed in boiling water and then cooked until
done.

In 2009, cosmonaut Gennady Padalka complained
to a Russian newspaper that he wasn't allowed to use the bathroom on
the American side of the Space Station.

As it turned out, Padalka actually blamed the closed bathroom door
on the Russian government, which had started charging NASA for
resources used by American astronauts in 2003.

The United States reciprocated by asking the Russians to keep out of
its facilities, including the toilet, which NASA paid $250 million
to develop. Padalka told the newspaper that the bathroom shutout was
having a real effect on his cosmonauts' morale.

Castles were always built with a
spiraling staircase that turned clockwise. This design served a
practical purpose, because incoming bad guys would ascend the stairs
and have a huge disadvantage with their sword arm. Since most people
are right-handed, the advantage was to the castle occupants
descending the stairs with their sword-arm free to attack.

Last time I checked, there were 6,714
earthquakes during the past 30 days. There were 189 over 2.5
magnitude in the past week. Here is a site to keep on your favorites
list for when you want some details. It has an interactive map along
with useful info. LINK

The top-payed player in
the first year of the NBA was the Detroit Falcon's Tom King who made
$16,500. He managed this salary by not only playing for the team
(salary $8,000 plus a $500 signing bonus) but also by convincing the
team owner to hire him to be the publicity manager and business
director for which he was paid an additional $8,000. Photos exist of
King, still in his uniform with a typewriter on the bleachers,
hammering out a press release after a game.

Chuck Conners, best known as 'The Rifleman', played for the Boston
Celtics in the first year of the NBA.

The silhouette on the NBA logo is Jerry West. He is also the
silhouette for the Mountaineer which stands outside the Mountainlair
(student center) at West Virginia University.

Below is an excerpt from the famous Grimm
brothers version of the very famous tale of the Pied Piper in which
the small German town of Hamelin loses all of its children to the
Piper when the mayor refuses to pay him for ridding the town of
rats.

“The long procession of children soon left the town and made its way
through the wood and across the forest till it reached the foot of a
huge mountain. When the piper came to the dark rock, he played his
pipe even louder still and a great door creaked open. Beyond lay a
cave. In trooped the children behind the pied piper, and when the
last child had gone into the darkness, the door creaked shut.”

Here is a quote from the wall of the Piper’s House in Hamelin today:
“In the year of 1284, on the day of Saints John and Paul, the 26th
of June, 130 child­ren born in Hamelin were seduced by a piper,
dressed in all kinds of colors, and lost at the calvary near the
koppen.”

The story is largely true, with some exaggerated parts. Many
theories abound as to the factual events of that day, but the most
logical seems to be that the piper represents death (death was
depicted as a skeleton wearing pied clothing in the middle ages) and
that the children who died were killed by the plague.

Pied means 'having two or more colors'. The word comes from middle
English and is taken from the word “magpie.” Thus, the pied piper
was a man wearing clothing of many colors.

“Caught red handed”, has its origins in
Scotland around the 15th century. Given the context it was often
used in the earliest references, the phrase “red hand” or “redhand”
probably came about referring to people caught with blood on their
hands.

The first known documented instance of “red hand” is in the Scottish
Acts of Parliament of James I, written in 1432. It subsequently
popped up numerous times in various legal proceedings in Scotland,
nearly always referring to someone caught in the act of committing
some crime, such as “apprehended redhand”, “taken with redhand”,
etc.

The first documented instance of the expression morphing from “red
hand” to “red handed” was in the early 19th century work Ivanhoe,
written by Sir Walter Scott.

The ice making business was booming way
before household refrigerators were common. In 1939 Frank Zamboni
and his brother had been in their ice block business for years, but
refrigerators were becoming popular enough that they saw things
quickly changing.

They had an inventory of many large refrigeration units, so they
decided to open an ice rink. It was there that Frank came up with a
way to resurface the ice. Originally it took three men an hour and a
half to get it done, but in 1949 he invented the precursor of the
ice machine we know today.

Now one man could resurface an ice rink in ten minutes. Like Xerox
and Kleenex, Zamboni is a trademarked word that we now use to refer
to all ice resurfacing machines. In April 2012, the 10,000th Zamboni
was sold and delivered to the Montreal Canadiens.

Free online calendar application
called Google Calendar. If you have a Google account, you can create
a Google Calendar. If you don't have one, you can register for a
free account.

You can use Google Calendar to schedule events and invite people to
participate. By sharing folders, you can compare your schedule with
other users. If everyone keeps his or her calendar up to date, it's
easy to avoid conflicts. A single user can open multiple calendars
and view all the scheduled events in a single window. Google
displays each calendar's events in a different color.

Google includes its search feature within the Google Calendar
system. You can search for specific calendars. Calendar owners can
choose to keep a calendar private or share it openly with everyone.
you can also set it up to send you an email to remind you of events
in the calendar.

The Charleston was one of the biggest dance
crazes of all time It was popularized in a song of the same name in
the 1923 Broadway show Runnin’ Wild.

The choreography for the show was most likely original, but the
style came from the Juba dance moves that originated among slaves on
plantations and in southern cities like Charleston, South Carolina,
where the name comes from. Here are a few super examples Charleston
moves set to dubstep. LINK

One of the characters in the Peanuts
universe was “555 95472,” or “5” for short. Introduced in September
1963, 5 explained that his father was so upset about people being
seen as “just a number,” he renamed the entire family as a series of
digits.

The family’s last name is taken from their ZIP Code, though when
spoken, 5 insists there’s an accent on the 4. The ZIP Code, by the
way, is the real one for Sebastopol, California, where Charles
Schulz lived at the time.

5’s sisters 3 and 4 made a few appearances in the strip before
disappearing, but 5 was occasionally a background character until
1981. You’ve probably seen 3, 4, and 5 already and didn’t even know
it. All three appear in the famous dance sequence in 'A Charlie
Brown Christmas'. 3 and 4 are the twin girls in purple dresses,
while 5 is the spiky-haired kid in orange.